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Ukrainians Desert Russian Orthodox Church En Masse

Children light candles during the Holy Fire ceremony on the eve of Orthodox Easter service in front of Volodymysky Cathedral in Kiev, on April 11, 2015. The author writes that for Ukrainian nationalists, the call to disarm in the face of Russian aggression was not welcomed. But some priests lauded the Russian occupation.Valentyn Ogirenko/reuters

Russia’s continued meddling in Ukraine is driving Ukrainian citizens out of the Russian Orthodox Church. Instead, they are swelling the ranks of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Kiev Patriarchate.

Traditionally, Ukraine has been home to the vast majority of Russian Orthodox Church members. In 1990, of the almost 12,000 Orthodox communities throughout the Soviet Union, more than 6,000 were in Ukraine; only 3,000 were in Russia itself.

When Ukraine declared its independence in 1991, a number of communities broke with the mother church to form the Kiev Patriarchate. The remaining churches renamed themselves the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate.

Through a series of agreements, as well as official favoritism by former President Viktor Yanukovych’s government, the vast majority of communities remained loyal to Moscow. There are 12,515 Moscow parishes, compared to Kiev’s 4,877 parishes.

The number of churchgoers tells a different story, however; approximately 15 million Ukrainians identify with the Kiev Patriarchate, while only 10 million remain loyal to the Moscow one.

And the numbers of defections are growing. Archpriest Heorhiy Kovalenko, a spokesman for the Moscow Patriarchate, explained in 2014 that there had been transfers of individual parishes to the Kiev Patriarchate since the mid-1990s, but no mass transfers. But in that year alone, 30 parishes switched allegiances, according to the Kiev Patriarchate.

In terms of individuals, the numbers are even greater: according to the Democratic Initiatives Foundation, a Kiev-based pollster, 31 percent of Ukrainians identified with the Kiev Patriarchate in 2011, and 26 percent with the Moscow Patriarchate.

By the end of 2015, however, the number loyal to Kiev had jumped to 44 percent, while 21 percent remained members of the Moscow Patriarchate.

Under ordinary circumstances, the growth of the Kiev Patriarchate would be unexpected. It is not recognized by either the Russian Orthodox Church nor by Orthodoxy’s world center, the Patriarchate of Constantinople.

The Kiev Patriarchate, however, has identified itself fully with Ukraine’s struggle for sovereignty. During the Euromaidan protests, St. Michael’s Church, part of the Kiev Patriarchate, opened its doors as a shelter for protesters.

Myroslav Marynovych, vice rector of the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lyiv, commented, “Many in Ukrainian society were amazed by the symbolism of this act, and it restored the ancient function of a church as a sanctuary for persecuted individuals and groups.” Moscow’s St. Sophia church, meanwhile, remained shut.

As Russia seized Crimea and unrest broke out in the Donbas, the Moscow Patriarchate tried to be a peacemaker, calling for both sides to lay down their weapons.

“Right now, Russia has committed an act of aggression against Ukraine,” he said. “Under these conditions, the church has had to face the question, ‘Does a church need to bless and protect its fatherland?’”

Speaking of his rivals, the patriarch commented, “Being dependent on Moscow and having their own Moscow patriarch, they cannot call aggression by its name. Some of the bishops and priests have openly spoken in support of Putin and in support of Russia, against the Ukrainian government and against Ukraine as such.”

As the Ukrainian conflict stretches on, more Ukrainians may agree with the assessment of Bishop Evstratii Zoria: “Having a church that is dependent on Russia is, in fact, a threat to our national security and a threat to our existence as Ukrainians.”